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1 3 | lad of Calyste's make is playing his proper part in making
2 4 | chances or to abstain from playing his~card. If he abstains
3 4 | gained at one stroke, without playing a card, horrified~Mademoiselle
4 4 | looked at the rector, who was playing pensively~with the counters.~ ~"
5 7 | Camille, he thought, must be playing on a small~upright piano
6 7 | the music. Felicite was playing for herself only; she was
7 8 | human being. Even now he is playing a part with me; he is posing~
8 13| the part which Camille was playing, and her own, unrolled~themselves
9 14| from childhood. Others were~playing with their wives and children.
10 14| seemed the part that she was playing!~there was no real greatness
11 15| real~feelings only. Beatrix playing comedy was judged to be
12 16| nothing better~than advice in playing /mouche/. During these long
13 16| against~which the waves were playing and dashing their white
14 18| for the satisfaction of playing mistress of a great household
15 18| with me?" said Beatrix, playing a provocative~amazement. "
16 19| isn't by smoking~cigars, playing whist, idling away their
17 19| wife, who, she said, was playing comedy, took~place in a
18 21| WICKEDNESS OF A GOOD WOMAN~Playing for these terrible stakes
19 26| where the young count was playing whist, Maxime went to~the
20 26| her mother; "we have been playing the fable~of 'The Two Pigeons,'
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